)/spiraprilat (CAS 83602-05-5) and of concomitantly administered spirapril on the pharmacokinetics of hydrochlorothiazide was investigated in an open, randomised, 3-way crossover study in 12 healthy male subjects. The test drug was a newly developed bi-layer tablet containing a fixed combination of spirapril hydrochloride monohydrate and hydrochlorothiazide (Quadroplus). The reference formulations were tablets containing solely spirapril hydrochloride monohydrate (Quadropril) or hydrochlorothiazide (produced exclusively for study medication). For spirapril, spiraprilat and hydrochlorothiazide the 90% confidence intervals of the AUC(0-infinity) as a measure for the extent of absorption were entirely included within the equivalence range of 0.8 to 1.25 and the 90% confidence intervals of the Cmax
Pharmacokinetics of spirapril and spiraprilat in patients with chronic renal failure. In this single-blind trial with a 2-week placebo run-in followed by a 4-week active-treatment period, patients were given 6 mg of spirapril once daily. Forty-nine hypertensive men and women were recruited; all had pretreatment diastolic blood pressures (DBP) of 95-115 mmHg with varying degrees of renal impairment. Regression analysis of pharmacokinetic parameters C(max)ss (the maximum steady-state drug concentration in plasma during a dosing interval), Cl/f (total plasma clearance) and k (elimination rate constant) of spirapril on creatinine clearance (Clcr) showed that the pharmacokinetics of spirapril were not significantly influenced by the degree of renal impairment. C(max)ss values of spiraprilat
' angiotensins I and II were measured by radioimmunoassay after high-performance liquid chromatography separation. Both for the lower and higher doses of spirapril, the time-course of changes of spiraprilat, the active metabolite of spirapril, and ACE activity was similar but the maximal rise in angiotensin I was twofold higher after 2 weeks administration than after the first dose. Angiotensin II after
level, or elimination half-life was detected for hydrochlorothiazide, spirapril, or its active metabolite, spiraprilat, during combination therapy. It was concluded that there was no significant effect of spirapril on single-dose kinetics of hydrochlorothiazide, nor of hydrochlorothiazide on single-dose kinetics of spirapril. Significant reductions in systolic blood pressure were noted 2--6 h after